Rory McIlroy prevailed in a nail-biting finish over Patrick Reed, the man he “prefers not to acknowledge” after a spat between the two, in the rain-delayed Dubai Desert Classic on Monday.
It was the first time McIlroy has won the first start of his new season and is his 15th DP World Tour victory in 231 starts.
His one-stroke victory was also his third Dubai Desert Classic success in 13 appearances.
He will remain world No 1, after Spaniard Jon Rahm failed to win the Farmers Insurance Open on the PGA Tour on Saturday.
McIlroy and Reed went into the tournament after a row when Reed reportedly threw a tee towards McIlroy on the practice range in Dubai.
The incident, caught on camera, turned out to be a lot milder than reported but the two have been at odds since McIlroy criticised players, including Reed, who joined the rival LIV Golf circuit.
Relations were not helped by McIlroy receiving a subpoena from Reed’s lawyer on Christmas Eve to appear as a witness in a case.
McIlroy had fallen behind Reed after a bogey on the 15th hole but he made amends with birdies on the 17th and 18th in a round of four-under-par 68.
Never in doubt 🙌@McIlroyRory claims his first Rolex Series victory.#HeroDDC | #RolexSeries pic.twitter.com/GVylbKzHVD
— DP World Tour (@DPWorldTour) January 30, 2023
The Northern Irishman finished on 19 under par, while Reed, starting the day four shots behind McIlroy, made a crucial bogey on the 16th and a par on the drivable par-four 17th hole in his round of 65.
“I think, mentally, today was probably one of the toughest rounds I’ve ever had to play because it would be really easy to let your emotions get in the way,” said McIlroy, who won $1.53-million for his effort.
“I just had to really concentrate on focusing on myself. I had to forget who was up there on the leaderboard, and I did that really well.”
McIlroy blew his chances last year when he hit his second shot into the water on the final hole – and he almost repeated the scenario with his tee shot on the 18th.
“Honestly, I feel I got lucky that my ball didn’t go in the water. It’s such an awkward tee shot for me,” he said. “Driver is too much and 3-wood is not quite enough. So I tried to hit a sort of easy driver and it came out really, really hot. I needed to lay up and try to get up and down that way.
“I said, ‘fool me once and fool me twice’, but I wasn’t going to get fooled a third time. It was nice to be able to play the percentages and make it pay off.”
McIlroy said such an early first win was even sweeter as he was not playing his best golf through the week.
“It means a lot. It was a battle all day. Honestly, it’s been a battle all week,” said McIlroy. “I really feel like I haven’t had my best all week, but I just managed my game so well and played really smart.”
Reed edged ahead by a shot when McIlroy made a bogey on the par-three 15th but gave it up on the next hole when his drive got stymied by a tree.
He then had to take a drop shot on the 17th from a small bush, and could not take advantage of the drivable par-four.
“I’m happy with that finish. I felt like we were probably almost playing for second going into the day,” said Reed. “I knew what I had to do early. I went out there and I put the pressure on him. You know, being four back of a guy like Rory is not easy.
“Hats off to him, he played some great golf.”
READ: Reed in fresh controversy over ball in palm tree
Australian Lucas Herbert, champion in 2019, closed with a six-under-par 66 to take solo third place at 16-under-par 272.
England’s Callum Shinkwin, who started with three bogies in his first six holes playing in the lead group with McIlroy, made six birdies after that to shoot a 69 and take solo fourth place at 273.
Jacques Kruyswijk was the highest-placed South African (T28) after finishing on eight-under 280, one shot ahead of Hennie du Plessis and Justin Walters. Oliver Bekker and Louis de Jager both ended on six under.
The DP World Tour stays in the UAE for a fourth consecutive week and will head to the northern emirate of Ras Al Khaimah this week for the $2-million RAK Championship.
© Agence France-Presse